The Mercedes I Never Drove
The cold that morning wasn’t the cute, Hallmark kind of winter cold. It was the kind that turned your eyelashes crunchy and made your lungs feel like they were inhaling broken glass. The kind that made the sidewalk shine like a warning.
The kind that took the city—our neat little suburb outside Chicago—and stripped it down to pure survival. I was outside anyway, because Ethan’s formula was almost gone. That was it.
That was the whole reason. Not a stroll. Not fresh air.
Just the grim math of motherhood: baby eats, baby lives, and the store doesn’t care that your husband is overseas or that your family treats you like a houseguest who overstayed her welcome. Ethan was strapped to my chest in an old carrier I’d bought off Facebook Marketplace, the fabric faded and soft from a thousand other mothers’ panic purchases. His tiny face was tucked against me, wide-eyed and quiet.
Too quiet, honestly—the kind of quiet that made me wonder what he’d already learned about tension. I was pushing a secondhand bicycle down the sidewalk with one hand, because the tire had gone flat the moment I left the driveway. The rubber had sighed and collapsed like it couldn’t take another day in this family either.
My fingers were numb, my cheeks stung, and my body still didn’t feel like my own after childbirth. I’d been sleeping in ninety-minute bursts for weeks, and the little sleep I got was the thin kind that didn’t heal anything. That’s when the black sedan pulled up beside me.
At first, I didn’t recognize it. I just saw the clean lines, the tinted windows, the way it moved like it had a right to the road. Then the rear window slid down.
“Olivia,” a voice said—deep, controlled, sharp enough to slice through the air. My stomach dropped. A cold dread coiled in my gut, far worse than the winter chill.
My grandfather’s face appeared in the window like a storm front rolling in. Victor Hale. Silver hair.
Steel eyes. The kind of expression that had made grown men sweat in boardrooms. “Why won’t you ride the Mercedes-Benz I gave you?” he demanded.
It wasn’t a question the way most people ask questions. It was a command disguised as curiosity. I stopped walking.
The bike tilted slightly, and I caught it before it fell. Ethan blinked at the sudden stillness, his tiny hands tightening against my sweater. I hadn’t seen Grandpa Victor in almost a year.
The story doesn’t end here –
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